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Related Video: Trump claims he wasn’t referring to clerk when he violated fraud trial gag order
Donald Trump and his son Eric Trump will return to the witness stand to testify in their own defence at the Trump Organization’s civil fraud trial in New York in early December.
The former president’s testimony will round out proceedings ahead of closing arguments. Justice Arthur Engoron delivered a pre-trial ruling finding the defendants liable for fraud, but there are other counts to consider.
Meanwhile, Mr Trump’s legal team in the same case has responded to an affidavit from court security regarding the inundation of the judge’s office with death threats and antisemitic abuse. They argue that the former president has no control over such threats.
Mr Trump has tried to rewrite the story after he was booed by a crowd of football fans during an appearance at Clemson University for the Palmetto Bowl in South Carolina.
While there was a sizeable contingent of Trump fans in the crowd, several videos captured the overwhelming jeers aimed at him as he arrived at the alma mater of his GOP primary rival Nikki Haley.
Mr Trump sought to downplay the disappointing reception, taking to Truth Social to fire off a series of links to highly positive articles about his appearance.
Fulton County: Eastman tries to sever case from Trump
Former Trump lawyer John Eastman has asked Fulton County Judge Scott McAfee to split the remaining 15 defendants in the sprawling Georgia 2020 election interference case into two groups so that those not named Donald Trump and who are not the presumptive Republican Party presidential nominee can get their cases resolved earlier in 2024.
Currently, prosecutors led by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis want to try the remaining 15 defendants (down from 19 following four plea deals) together at a trial beginning on 5 August 2024.
Judge McAfee has previously said he would be open to splitting up the defendants to make things easier to handle administratively.
Oliver O'Connell28 November 2023 00:00
Trump boasts he has glowing health report thanks to ‘improved diet’
Donald Trump marked Joe Biden’s 81st birthday on Monday 20 November by releasing a letter from his physician that reports the former president is in “excellent” physical and mental health. The letter posted on the former president’s social media platform contained no details to support its claims - measures like weight, blood pressure and cholesterol levels, or the results of any test. His report comes as age has emerged as a key issue of the 2024 presidential election, which could find Mr Trump and Mr Biden facing off once again.
Oliver O'Connell27 November 2023 23:30
Full story: Donald Trump will testify again at his New York fraud trial
Eric Trump is scheduled to testify on 6 December, and his father is scheduled to appear on the witness stand on 11 December, according to lead attorney Christopher Kise.
Oliver O'Connell27 November 2023 23:00
ICYMI: Trump’s fraud trial court flooded with credible death threats and antisemitic abuse
A flood of credible death threats and antisemitic messages have inundated the judge and court staff overseeing Donald Trump’s fraud trial in New York, according to the court’s top public safety officer.
Judge Arthur Engoron and his clerk received “hundreds of threats, disparaging and harassing comments and antisemitic messages” that followed the former president’s harassment, according to a court filing to support a gag order that blocks Mr Trump from attacking the court’s staff.
Transcriptions of threatening voicemails after Mr Trump first targeted Judge Engoron’s chief clerk fill more than 275 single-spaced pages, according to Wednesday’s filing.
The threats against them are “serious and credible and not hypothetical or speculative,” according to the filing from Charles Hollon, an officer-captain with the court’s Department of Public Safety assigned to a judicial threats unit.
“You should be executed,” one message reads.
Oliver O'Connell27 November 2023 22:30
Georgia election workers ask court to reject Giuliani request for bench trial
Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss, the mother-daughter election workers who sued Rudy Giuliani for defamation and won, have asked the court to reject a request by the former New York mayor for a bench trial rather than a jury trial to determine damages.
The trial is scheduled to commence on 11 December and is expected to last four days.
Here’s Alex Woodward’s previous reporting on the case:
Oliver O'Connell27 November 2023 22:15
Christie blames Trump for rise in antisemitism and Islamophobia in US
The ex-governor appeared on CNN as reports emerged about the shooting of three college students in Burlington, Vermont, as they walked to a Thanksgiving dinner; reports indicated that the three were of Palestinian descent and were wearing traditional keffiyehs signaling their identities at the time of the shooting.
Oliver O'Connell27 November 2023 22:00
DOJ files new documents relating to search warrant of Trump’s Twitter account
The Department of Justice has filed seven new redacted documents related to a search warrant on former President Donald Trump’s Twitter account.
The filings lay out some of what investigators were looking for, including searches conducted by the account.
Prosecutors also opposed Twitter notifying Mr Trump about the warrants arguing that it could “result in the destruction or tampering with evidence” and “intimidation of potential witnesses”.
Oliver O'Connell27 November 2023 21:43
DC election subversion trial judge denies Trump attempt to subpoena more Jan 6 committee records
In the federal election interference case against Donald Trump, US District Judge Tanya Chutkan has denied an attempt by the former president’s defence team to subpoena additional records from the House select committee that investigated January 6.
In her ruling, Judge Chutkan says that partly because of the broad scope of the records they are asking for, the request from Mr Trump's attorneys looks less like a “good faith effort” and more like a “fishing expedition”.
Oliver O'Connell27 November 2023 21:36
George Santos set to be only third member of Congress expelled since 1861 — but when?
Scandal-plagued New York Rep George Santos looks set to join an exclusive group of people as he has acknowledged that he’s likely to be expelled from Congress.
“I know I’m going to get expelled when this expulsion resolution goes to the floor,” Mr Santos, 35, said last week in a broadcast on the X social media platform, formerly known as Twitter.
In the X Space event hosted by Monica Matthews, a rightwing personality, Mr Santos said, “I have done the math over and over and it doesn’t look really good”. But he claimed that he would wear his expulsion “like a badge of honour”.
The latest blow of many to Mr Santos’s short yet tumultuous political career came in the form of a 56-page report from the House Ethics Committee released earlier this month which outlined “substantial evidence” that Mr Santos violated federal law.
The report included allegations that Mr Santos used campaign money to pay for his personal expenses, such as Botox, and luxury purchases at Hermes and Ferragamo, as well as smaller sums spent on OnlyFans, food, parking, travel and rent.
The House can consider the motion to expel Mr Santos put forward by ethics panel chair GOP Rep Michael Guest as soon as Tuesday when lawmakers return from Thanksgiving break but when the vote may be taken up on the floor remains unclear.
Mr Santos would be the first member of the House to be removed in modern times without first having been convicted of a crime.
Only five representatives have ever been expelled from the House in the course of US history:
Gustaf Kilander27 November 2023 21:30
For 24 minutes a DeSantis aide lay ‘dead or dying’ outside governor’s office
A Ron DeSantis aide lay “dead or dying” in a governor’s office hallway for 24 minutes before anyone came to his aide, according to a report.
Peter Antonacci, 74, died on 23 September 2022 after “abruptly” leaving a meeting of the Office of Election Crimes and Safety, which the governor had appointed him to lead two months earlier.
Mr DeSantis created the office after one-term president Donald Trump’s false claims of election fraud in his 2020 defeat to Joe Biden.
At the time of his death, officials said that Antonacci died “while at work in the Capitol building, of which the governor’s office is a part.”
Graeme Massie reports.
Oliver O'Connell27 November 2023 21:00